Woodward & Bernstein

On June 18, 1972, a story that would uncover one of the most famous political scandals broke in the Washington Post; The Watergate Scandal. Five men were arrested on June 17, 1972 for breaking into the Democratic National Committee’s office at the Watergate facilities in Washington, D.C. Two reporters for the Washington Post, Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, investigated the break in and later uncovered President Richard Nixon’s involvement in the scandal.

According to the Web Exhibitions at the University of Texas at Austin, Woodward and Bernstein were unable to connect President Nixon to the five burglars until they got a big break from an anonymous source which they called, Deep Throat (The Woodward and Bernstein Watergate Papers). Thanks to the information reported by Woodward and Bernstein from Deep Throat, President Nixon, along with much of his administration, was found guilty. Nixon knew impeachment was undoubtedly going to be his punishment, so he chose to resign on August 9, 1974 (Richard Nixon Wikipedia). In 2005, Deep Throat was exposed as “William Mark Felt, Sr., the former deputy director of the FBI” (Watergate Scandal Wikipedia).

Social media did not exist in the 70s. The general public had to rely on information from reporters like Woodward and Bernstein and newspapers like the Washington Post to get their information. Many skeptics questioned wether or not the information in Woodward and Bernstein’s articles were reliable. According to the Woodward and Bernstein Watergate Papers, after Nixon’s dirty laundry was aired and his involvement was confirmed, the Washington Post received the Pulitzer Prize.

The case took many years before everything was finally uncovered. I believe that in today’s day and age, a scandal as big as Watergate would break much much sooner. With social media sites such as Twitter and Facebook where things can be posted so quickly at any time of the day, scandals could be broadcasted much quicker than in the 70s. I find it interesting to think about how different the Watergate Scandal could have ended if it happen in 2014 rather than in 1972.